Greer v. Smith

Thomas, J.:

These are two appeals from orders, one overruling a demurrer to the complaint, and one granting a temporary injunction. The plaintiffs owned residences in the town of Rye, where, in 1906, the defendant established his plant for rendering fat and making tallow, fertilizer, etc. He emptied his refuse into a pond, from which it passed to and polluted a brook passing through the premises of the plaintiff Greer. Greer brought an action to enjoin the offense and procured a temporary injunction, whereupon the defendant acquired the pond and drew off its water, and then the action rested. But this action is brought to enjoin the defendant from pouring his refuse into the brooks and thereby disseminating odors that affect injuriously property of the plaintiffs, and defendant has been enjoined pendente lite from operating the factory in any way that will “ produce any offensive odors and from directly or indirectly discharging from said premises into any of the brooks or water courses in the neighborhood any refuse or *422waste of any kind from said factory.” The principal grounds of appeal are that persons above him pollute the brook, but that he does not contribute to it, and his further contentions are: (1) That the court has no jurisdiction of the action to abate a common nuisance, but rather that the action should be by the Attorney-General or by indictment; (2) that there is a defect of parties plaintiff in that the Attorney-General is not joined; (3) that the complainant does not state a cause of action; (4) that plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law in that defendant can be prosecuted criminally. The second appeal involves the demurrer, and defendant urges (1) that the complaint states a cause of action for a common or public and not a private nuisance; (2) that there is another action between the same parties by indictment and also a civil action for the same cause of action; (3) that the Attorney-General should be a party plaintiff; (4) that the complaint does not state a cause of action.

On the facts the temporary injunction was within the sound discretion of the court below and should not be disturbed, léaving the further consideration of the issue to the court upon the trial of the action. The demurrer raises questions, viz.: (1) May the present plaintiffs maintain the action? (2) does the complaint state a cause of action? It will be observed that ■ the action not only is brought by persons owning land in severalty, but that these persons appear as plaintiffs “on behalf of themselves and all other residents or property owners in the Town of Eye, Westchester County, New York, similarly situated.” So several persons, each injured ar to his separate property by a nuisance touching each piece, have joined for individual redress, and also sue on behalf of all persons in the town not named but similarly affected. The complaint shows that the plaintiffs owning in severalty combine to enjoin odors that are indivisible and commonly affect injuriously such several properties. The rule is that where several persons are affected by a nuisance they may join as complainants in a bill to restrain it. (Wood Nuis. [3d ed.] 1024.) In Peck v. Elder (3 Sandf. 126) the complainants were the several owners of tenements which they alleged to be injuriously affected by the proposed erection of a building to be used for the purpose of melting the fat and tallow from slaughtered animals, and from *423using same for such purpose. The chancellor upon appeal from an order dissolving the temporary injunction, restored the same, saying: “ The objection that different persons owning separate tenements, which are injuriously affected by a nuisance, cannot join in a suit to restrain such nuisance, is untenable. The case of Reid and Others v. Gifford (Hopk. Ch. 416), decided by Chancellor S andfoed in 1825, is the other way. So far as the bill seeks merely to restrain, by injunction, a nuisance which is a common' injury to each and every of the complainants, there is no good reason why they should not all be permitted to join in one suit, instead of multiplying cases by bringing several distinct suits.” The action was transferred to the Superior Court, where it was held that the complainants might join in a suit for a perpetual injunction, though not to recover damages. In Brady v. Weeks (3 Barb. 157) the action was brought by several complainants, owners of dwelling houses in the neighborhood, to restrain the defendants from operating a slaughter house. In granting the order for an injunction, Paige, J., said: “As the nuisance in question is a common, although not a joint, injury to the plaintiffs, they have properly united as plaintiffs in the bill to restrain the nuisance,” and he cites Murray v. Hay (1 Barb. Ch. 59), where it was held that two or more persons owning distinct tenements which were injured or rendered uninhabitable or less valuable by a common nuisance, might join in a suit to restrain it, and the chancellor in that case, in support of his conclusion, discusses the earlier decisions. In the case at bar the tortious act in its entirety operates on all, for the gases sweeping in mass over the neighborhood injured one plaintiff here and the other there. The hurt is in divers places, and the injuries may differ in degree and perchance in time of infliction. That is unimportant, as the nuisance is a common one. (Wood Nuis. [3d ed.] 1160.) The same harmful agent, unarrested and unchanged, passes from one to another. It is as if a person wrongfully should let issue a cloud of smoke drifting to one man’s land, and then to another and to another, or gather water so that it would sweep over the fields of different persons (Town of Sullivan v. Phillips, 110 Ind. 320), or should wrongfully pollute a brook, the waters whereof flow through farms in different ownership. It is one wrongful act compre*424heading the property of several in its injurious progress. It combines all in its invasion, and hence all should be permitted jointly to oppose the invasion. It classifies the injured, and the class should be permitted to seek a remedy. If a person should make fraudulent conveyance of his property, all judgment creditors could unite to set aside the conveyance (Wait Fraud. Conv. §§ 108, 109), or one could sue in behalf of all. In Smith v. Schulting (14 Hun, 52) it is said of such a case that upon the question of such joinder of plaintiffs, “They may join in the suit because there was one connected interest among them all centering in the principal point in issue,” or, as it was stated in Powell v. Spaulding (3 Greene [Iowa], 443, 461), “where there is -unity in interest, as to the object to be attained by the bill, the parties seeking redress in chancery may join in the same complaint.” The wrong that hurts one hurts the others, not by an appreciable part acting upon one person and another similar part acting upon another. Each person injured has a right to an action to enjoin the harmful thing in its entirety, because in its entirety it harms him. If each of a number ol persons has this remedy, all can unite and have a right to unite to stop the cause. There is but one thing to be accomplished, viz., stop the offending operation. Shall each person come to court with his own complaint, so that perchance a hundred shall separately ask in separate suits to make cease what as a cause is common to all ? So I consider that all the persons injured need not join, but that the plaintiffs may represent them. Section 448 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “And where the question is one of a common or general interest of many persons; or where the persons, who might be made parties, are very numerous, and it may be impracticable to bring them all before the court, one or more may sue or defend for the benefit of all.” But let it be assumed that each has a separate cause of action. The Code (§446) is: “All persons having an interest in the subject of tfee action, and in obtaining the judgment demanded, may be joined as plaintiffs, except as otherwise expressly prescribed in this act.” If it be assumed “That there is a misjoinder of parties ¡plaintiff,” or “That causes of action have been improperly united,” there is ground of demurrer not taken here. It is demurred that the plaintiffs *425have not legal capacity to sue, but it is limited to the objection that the cause of action is in the Attorney-General. So the demurrer should be overruled if the complaint states a cause of action. The complaint in paragraphs 13 to 16, inclusive, alleges private injury and special damages to private property, and that is sufficient. (Francis v. Schoellkopf, 53 N. Y. 152; Adams v. Popham, 76 id. 410; Kavanagh v. Barber, 131 id. 211, 214; Ackerman v. True, 175 id. 353, 361; Wood Nuis. [3d ed.] § 602 et seq.) There is another action pending between Greer and the defendant, and also a criminal action. Neither is between the same parties, nor does the Greer action charge the same offense or seek the same remedy.

Each order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.

Jerks, P. J., Hirschberg, Burr and Carr, JJ., concurred.

On each appeal order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.